My earlier comment notwithstanding, I do think that the site would be better off if Inks left his position. (The fact that the village idiot has dropped in to express his support for him only confirms this.)

My earlier comment notwithstanding, I do think that the site would be better off if Inks left his position. (The fact that the village idiot has dropped in to express his support for him only confirms this.)

My earlier comment notwithstanding, I do think that the site would be better off if Inks left his position. (The fact that the village idiot has dropped in to express his support for him only confirms this.)

- Tuesday will be dry with high pressure anchored over the Southeast.- Gusty winds will target Oklahoma, Texas, northern Arkansas and southern Florida.- Wind gusts of 40 to 50 mph are possible across Oklahoma.- Sunny skies will extend from the lower Mississippi Valley into the Southeast.- Lows will range from the frosty 20s and 30s in the Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee to the 40s and 50s in the southern Plains and some 60s at the southern tips of Texas and Florida.- With temperatures below average near the coastal Southeast but above average in the lower Mississippi Valley and southern Plains, highs will range from the 50s in North Carolina to the 70s in Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana and central and southern Florida.

Midwest

- Tuesday will be dry region wide, except for a few rain and snow showers near the Canadian border.- Gusty southerly winds will sweep from the central Plains to the Ohio Valley and Great Lakes while, behind a cold front, gusty winds will turn west and northwest across the western Dakotas.- Highs will range from the 30s and 40s near the Canadian border to the 70s across the central Plains.

West

- Rain showers and snow will accompany a cold front from parts of California to Montana on Tuesday.- Four to twelve inches of snow will fall across higher elevations from the Sierra to the northern Rockies.

So, rain/snow in Idaho? Well, doesn't really matter one way or the other, as Romney's going to win it regardless. Show also in Alaska, but looks like nice weather in the rest of the Super Tuesday states.

indicate that people can show up at their caucus between 5:30 and 8pm local time, with 8pm corresponding to either 9pm or 10pm ET, depending on which time zone. It says they'll post live results starting at 8:30pm Central / 9:30pm Eastern.

Every county starts their caucuses at 7pm local time, but part of the state is in Mountain time, and part is in Pacific time, so that corresponds to either 9pm or 10pm ET, depending on which time zone.

says the caucuses take place between 4pm and 8pm Alaska standard time, which translates to between 8pm and 12am Eastern.

Meanwhile all the polls in the primary states will be closing at 8pm Eastern at the latest. And caucuses tend to count their votes much slower than primaries. So it looks like there could be a big gap in the evening between the primary results and the caucus results.

Not exactly bustling, but I was the 42nd to vote in my precinct this morning---but as it's extremely Democratic, I may have been one of the first Republicans to cast a ballot. I'll be quite interested to see the overall Republican turnout here when the results come in.